Sunday, February 18, 2007

Sunday Review

Financial cutbacks led to a consolidation on the Boston Globe’s op-ed pages, and the paper unfortunately decided to eliminate Cathy Young’s weekly column—by far the most interesting offering on the page. In her last column, Young noted, “The apparent collapse of the rape charges against the lacrosse players at Duke University clearly illustrates the dangers of the ‘women don’t lie about rape’ stance adopted by victim-advocacy groups, whose credibility is likely to sustain serious damage.”

As if to confirm Young’s observation, a post from Kathleen Bergin, a law professor at South Texas College of Law (not exactly a Tier 1 school) whose expertise comes in the one-sided areas of “critical race theory and feminist jurisprudence.” (In the academic arena, Bergin’s latest article is entitled, Sexualized Advocacy and the Ascendant Feminist Backlash Against Female Lawyers.”)

The post’s thesis: the players are “not innocent,” and, “If brought to trial, my bet is they will be found ‘not guilty.’ And yet, they are so far from ‘innocent.’” This view is an amplification of the Group of 88’s assertion that their crusade would continue regardless of what the police say or the court decides.Bergin termed it “undisputed” that racist and sexist epithets were used toward the dancers in the house, and also termed it “undisputed” that the broomstick comment was a threat of rape. Yet the only “witness” to have made the first claim is the accuser; the first figures to make the second claim were the police.

Case expert Bob in Pacifica pointed out these and other factual errors in a detailed reply. The blog’s response? “Based on the comments elicited by this post and some conversations with other bloggers, it appears that an orchestrated ‘opinion shaping’ astroturfing campaign is underway on behalf of the defendants in the Duke Lacrosse Players sexual assault case . . . The defendants’ defense lawyers are doing a very zealous and thorough job on behalf of the accused lacrosse players, and that is exactly what they are supposed to do. I need to make it very clear that I have no evidence that they are behind the blog astroturfing campaign that seems to be going on.”

No, but the implication was as clear as it was absurd. No further comments have appeared on the post. So--if even the blog’s commenters are out of step with the post, it’s not because the post is off-target; instead, it’s because Brad Bannon is busily posting anonymous comments when he’s not busy cracking conspiracies to hide DNA evidence. Not exactly the most convincing argument.

Amanda Marcotte, it’s worth recalling, simply deleted comments critical of her view on the case.

As Young observed, people who refuse to consider facts that contradict their worldviews are those whose “credibility is likely to sustain serious damage” from the case.

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Friday is the deadline for Mike Nifong’s attorneys to file his response to the State Bar. If nothing else, the response should be creative—especially since the words of one Nifong lawyer, David Freedman, powerfully indicted the defendant for the very offenses the bar cited.

Also on Friday, Stuart Taylor will be speaking on the case at the University of Memphis. It’s worth remembering that Taylor was months ahead of most national journalists in recognizing the gravity of Nifong’s procedural misconduct; he published his first critique in early May.

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WUNC (a public radio station well-known in the Triangle for its politically correct views) ran a segment on the case last week, featuring an interview with Sara Lipka, the author of the lengthy story on the Group of 88 in the Chronicle of Higher Education. The teaser? “One of the less-publicized impacts of the Duke Lacrosse case has been a widening division among the University’s faculty. It began with an open letter published in the Duke student newspaper back in the early days of the case. It was paid for and signed by a collection of faculty now referred to by some as the ‘Group of 88.’”

The interview was basically a fair one. When even NPR won’t put its credibility on the line to defend the Group, it seems the 88 have few reliable allies remaining.

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Today’s Liestoppers contains a summary of an important article, by Henry Korn, in the New York Law Journal. Korn’s conclusion:

This is a story that squarely teaches that 'rushing to judgment' without wisely stepping back and reviewing the evidence runs directly counter to the ethical obligations that govern how attorneys are required to conduct themselves. The harm of such ignorant conduct is that others are grievously wounded. Familiarity with, and adherence to, the code of professional responsibility provides the foundation for attorneys to avoid abuse of their license and harm others by so doing.

The significance of the piece: Nifong’s record is increasingly making it into national legal circles as an example of gross prosecutorial misconduct. This development heightens pressure on the Bar to deal with him severely.

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A peculiar column in today’s Des Moines Register, which to my knowledge has not previously commented on the case. Columnist Rekha Basu writes on what she terms the myths about sexual assault, with a thesis that attackers often come from family or friends.

It would seem the lacrosse case has nothing to do with this thesis. But that she quotes from Wendy Murphy gives some sense of Basu’s perspective. On the case, Basu writes,

Recent reporting on the Duke lacrosse case, including a "60 Minutes" segment, also gives the impression that the prosecutions case fell apart because the victim recanted the allegation (and therefore that it didnt happen) . . . As to why the rape charge was withdrawn, instead of blaming the victim, you could blame the limitations of North Carolina law, which limits its definition of rape to penile-vaginal penetration.
As if eager to prove Cathy Young’s thesis that this case will be devastating to the credibility of so-called victims’ rights groups, Basu turns to the head of an organization called North Carolina Coalition Against Sexual Assault to establish the validity of her portrayal of events.

It’s not clear from her article if Basu actually watched the 60 Minutes broadcast; if she had, she would have learned that the prosecutions case fell apart because Nifong’s massive prosecutorial misconduct was eventually exposed. As for the “victim” recanting her allegation, the significant issue came in the December 21 version of events contradicting in virtually every important way every other story the “victim” had previously told.

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In a post last week, I erroneously attributed the following quote to Christina Headrick: The real enemy was “white people who are incredulous and skeptical that racism exists at all and attribute claims that racism does indeed exist to some sort of enigmatic and massive hallucination on the part of people of color.” That quote actually came not from Headrick but from another potbanger. I apologize for the error.

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An event from a week ago that I should have mentioned last Sunday: Assistant Attorney General Brian Wilks has just become a Durham assistant district attorney, serving as supervisor of District Court operations.

John Stevenson—faithful to Nifong to the end—assured Herald-Sun readers that the move “has nothing to do with the controversial Duke lacrosse sex-offense case.”

Right. Every day, bright and talented people give up a post in the state attorney general’s office to go work for a prosecutor who faces an ethics trial a few months down the road.

Wilks' background is interesting: an African-American, he has a J.D. from NCCU, served as a public defender, and seems to have good ethical reputation. (“Seems” is necessary here because the figures that Stevenson quoted praising Wilks’ ethics also had defended Nifong’s ethics, and so have little or no credibility on the issue.)

A Machiavellian observer might suggest that Wilks is the frontrunner to get Easley’s nod if and when Nifong is forced to resign.

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I received two follow-up tips to the post from last week on the potentially “jaw-dropping” proposals under consideration from the Campus Culture Initiative. The first suggested that the Towerview article understated the degree to which Peter Wood, chair of the athletics subgroup, had misrepresented the views of his subgroup in his report to the full committee. The second suggested that the CCI's most dramatic recommendations involve changes to university housing and athletics policies, changes that overwhelming numbers of alumni would oppose. Neither piece of news came as a surprise, given the dominance within the CCI of the most extreme critics of the lacrosse team.

It is my sense that most Duke alumni look back fondly on their time at the institution; at some point, they might need to mobilize to counter a body whose leadership the Chronicle effectively critiqued last month: "Stacking the CCI with critics of 'white male privilege' suggests that the initiative was created to pacify countercultural professors, rather than to shape a new and improved campus culture."

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Bill Anderson has a must-read column up this week outlining the possible criminal charges to come, in a case that he calls a classic example of “a criminal fraud.” Ominous signs that he sees: the erasure of police recordings whose preservation the defense had requested. Police spokespersons covering up the fact that the captains “willingly gave DNA samples, and then offered to take lie detector tests,” and refusing to consider how this behavior suggested strongly for innocence.

The case should have ended, Anderson notes, no later than March 22: “Police should have told the district attorney that there was no evidence for rape other than the numerous conflicting stories told by a woman whose previous criminal behavior and dishonesty were well-known to the Durham police . . . Instead, the Durham police at this point chose to lie; why they chose to lie is a question that has not yet been answered.”

Anderson also reminds us of an incident mostly forgotten now: a lacrosse player supposedly emailing “his teammates to tell them that he was coming forward to testify.” The player, Anderson correctly notes, never sent that email. “Instead, it was manufactured by another party. Was it the police? That is where the evidence points, but the ‘blue wall of silence’ is not giving in at this point.”

Nifong, meanwhile, “conspired with Brian Meehan, who directed a private lab that tested the DNA samples, to withhold a large amount of exculpatory evidence.” This action, Anderson correctly observes, opens up the possibility of a federal conspiracy charge—in which Nifong, Sergeant Gottlieb, and Linwood Wilson would be prime targets.

Anderson also poses some other interesting questions. Why, on March 28, did Kammie Michaels, the DPD public affairs officer, still claim that the origin of Kim Roberts’ first 911 call was unknown? I e-mailed Michaels to ask her this question; she refused comment.

And how would investigators view Gottlieb’s “straight-from-memory” report? Anderson sees it as “a blatant attempt to manufacture inculpatory evidence, and manufacturing evidence is a felony.”

Finally, was the December 21 statement from the accuser simply an attempt to continue the frame against innocent suspects?

Based on this record, Anderson concludes, “We now officially have the Alice-in-Wonderland state in which the accused are innocent, but the accusers are the criminals. While state authorities would like for us to believe that only Nifong has committed ‘questionable’ acts, we can see that the criminal conspiracy runs much deeper than a rogue prosecutor. Much deeper.”

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March 24 is a critical day in the case, since it was on this day that Mike Nifong—in a violation of standard procedures—assumed personal control of the criminal investigation.

March 24 is also the day in which the national media first came to know Cpl. David Addison, who, it turns out, was filling in for Kammie Michaels as the department’s spokesperson.

John in Carolina recognized the procedural impropriety of Addison’s conduct before just about anyone else, and he’s in the midst of a three-part series re-examining the corporal’s role in the case.

Is it any coincidence that on the day Nifong assumed personal command of the case, the police department starting making factually inaccurate, inflammatory public statements?

214 comments:

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Anonymous said...

Re: Steven Horwitz and Duke Prof (10:19) posts.

I respectfully suggest all writers give serious consideration to these comments.

The DIW post is relevant and beneficial to the Duke 3 only as long as it is focused on their defense. Prof. Johnson's writings address the issues in this case and comments on them. Let's focus.

Yet, we can seek to find some levity in the middle of this hoax. But we can often do so by pointing out the idiocy of the AV's defenders.

Other comments, even though important to the progress of our nation, should be reserved for other, more pertinent blog sites. Posters could even refer readers to those other sites.

Finally, and ignoring my own advice, this city boy would still love to know what "all hat and no cattle" means.

gk

Anonymous said...

"All hat, no cattle" means he looks like a rancher, but has no ranch. Encourages a false impression, is a fraud, a drug store cowboy...

Anonymous said...

GP 11:19

Good idea. I think that the Duke Prof. said that he's not one of the 88/87, though.

Anonymous said...

Indeed, 11:34, we will all be gone. KC: one piece of advice, and you can take it or leave it. I would respectfully ask Simon to go. He has his own blog, and he represents a particularly nasty element on this one. If you really want more level-headed people to stay, you'll have to ask him to go.

Anonymous said...

11:55
Thanks. Makes sense. I'll use it to prove to my kids that I am still "hip" to the real world.
gk

Anonymous said...

After reading Lee Baker’s “Profit, Power, and Privilege; The Racial Politics of Ancestry” I came to the following conclusions:

Baker review

1. I shall begin with Mr. Baker’s closing remark. This says it all and explains why these people will continue to pursue the unjust railroading of three innocent men. They need to go and Duke needs to clean house. He closes with, “But I hope you get a better understanding that it is not a game of chance but a life-and –death struggle between competing forces for profit, power and privilege.”

2. It is admirable that Mr. Baker provided a link to his work, most of the other’s, for what ever reason do not. Duke is in screaming need of leadership, transparency and governance. Something simple like posting links to articles is an easy start.

3. Mr. Baker only hit the daily double; race and class warfare. There was not reference to gender.

4. Ironically his article is very similar to one printed in the Dallas Morning News today, “The Latent Racism of the Census” by Brent Staples, New York Times reprint. So I can pay $46,000 per year or $180 for a newspaper subscription to tell me the Man is out to get everyone.

5. I could find not Google or Find Articles reference to Souls, Fall 2001, Volume 3, No. 4, so I have not way to ascertain the quality of the publication.

6. “…there is a simple and usually predictable logic that shapes the “Contradictory force. Facts and tendencies” – profit, power, and privilege.” It appears that Mr. Baker has been looking for something like the Duke hoax to reinforce his follow the money theory, since 2001. He found it, and it clarifies one reason why no apology will be likely.

7. Though he lambaste white for introducing disease and Christianity to Hawaii, while implying it was intentional, he makes no mention of the diseases wrecking havoc in the black community. “Protestant missionaries began exerting enormous influence on Hawaiian society and politics, often using force to convert religion, morality, and lifestyle.” One wonders what Reverends Sharpton and Jackson feel about this assault of Christianity.

8. “…usurping and concentrating the island’s economic and political power.” I can think of few places, more prosperous than Hawaii; none are totalitarian, Marxist, statist, or communist states. I need more people to come usurp my personal island so that I may enjoy the same economic and political power.

9. Most notably…”Perhaps the high-water mark of this renaissance was the 1993 apology rendered by Congress.” Perhaps the Gang of 88 can also find a way to apologize?

10. “The case would never have been appealed if it were not for the deep pockets and the ardent support of conservative critics…” Goodness, where have I seen that before? Oh yeah, this little thingy in Durham is all a lot of nothing.

Anonymous said...

"You know, when I was a teenager in highschool, if a guy managed to have sex with a female teacher we would have thought that he was the luckiest guy in the world"

What if you were in middle school? Elementary school?

Anonymous said...

12:07 Inre: hip to kids...won't happend around my house.

A good acid test for rancher frauds is to ask them how many sections of land they own? They won't know that a section is one mile square and is typical in parts of Texas.

In thinking of West Texas I'm remined of a friend who when asked how he was doing, would respond, "My lucks so bad that if I fell in a barrel full of titties, I'd come out sucking my thumb." Mr. Nifong understands, I'm certain.

Anonymous said...

12:03 That's not a very level headed comment.

Anonymous said...

Talking about filthy elements of society...12:03am is about the filthiest and most underhanded excuse for human on this blog.
Bet her / she / it cried their way through life to get their way.

Anonymous said...

12:03

If we really want levelheaded people to stay and this place not be taken over by leftist dictators and hilarious morons like you,we'd see to it that you are asked to go.

M. Simon said...

12:03AM,

It would be really helpful if you could show where my research is incorrect.

Are some people cognitively advantaged over others?

Are some identifiable populations cognitively advantaged over others?

Are some people faster runners than others?

Are some identifiable populations faster runners than other groups?

Are Watusis mostly tall? Are Pygmies mostly short? Are the Igbo smarter than average?

Are there genetic markers for such characterisitics?

Do those genetic markers correlate with other genetic markers?

Why do Ashkenazi Jews differentily get the genetic disease Tay Sachs? What genetic markers does that correlate with?

Why aren't there more Ashkenai Jews in the NFL? Is it discrimination?

Does asking such questions make you uncomfortable? Why?

Once there are questions you can't ask or answers you can't give you no longer have science. You have superstition.

Is superstition superior to science?

Anonymous said...

10:34
... the Dallas Morning News bizarre slant that Marcotte leaving the campaign is some sort of witch hunt...
The DMN is pretty good about printing opposing viewpoints. Perhaps they just need to receive some...

I have emailed a letter to them in response to a front page article about the wonderful new cooperative effort between the new Dallas DA and the Innocence Project (featured on the IP website as well). I want them to explain to the public how the IP works (since the news story focused on DNA) in light of Mr. Nuefeld's statements that seem to bring the validity of DNA-based exoneration into question.
I am hoping they will do a follow-up story describing all of the criteria for case re-evaluation.

Anonymous said...

The amazing thing is that people are *still* trying to defend their denunciation of three men who are almost certainly innocent (and one of whom certainly is):

http://pandagon.net/2007/03/09/slandering-and-harassing-women-is-just-fine-if-youre-a-man/#more-4909

"I realize we should all be weeping and gnashing our teeth over the Duke lacrosse players, who are of course! Suffering just like Emmet Till! but I just can’t.

Let’s compare, shall we, the plight of men who have money, who have truckloads of sympathy from people and the media, and who have defense attorneys who have turned them into saints. The plight of men who can have their day in court."

Nevermind that this "day in court" would've been run by a prosecutor who is now threatened with disbarment for prosecutorial misconduct. No, commentators were perfectly right to pile on until a verdict.

"This is known as slander. Yet it’s what women and girls have to deal with, and we have no right to say anything about it, lest we be accused of whining. Opine on a man who’s accused of rape, a man who’ll have his day in court, however, and suddenly you’re guilty of slander and loving all things fascist."

Amanda Marcotte didn't "opine on a man who's accused of rape." She joined in the accusation. Of three men who are (almost certainly) innocent. Who were being prosecuted by a man facing ethics charges that could result in disbarment. That is loving all things fascist.


I have sympathy for half the point the author tried to make--that harassing female law students is not tolerable. That's obviously true.

But to make the point by defiantly bringing up the Duke hoax? Wow, is the author trying to destroy his/her credibility?

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